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Bruker's Benchtop NMR
Easy To Install
The Fourier, an 80 MHz high-performance nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) benchtop spectrometer designed for the routine laboratory. With a cryogen-free magnet design, the Fourier makes NMR accessible in the lab where users and operators work. It can be installed in the fume hood or on the bench without the need for new infrastructure, providing easy maintenance and minimal cost of ownership. The performance of the benchtop, combined with the intuitive software, means any lab can now incorporate the definitive analytical answers only NMR can provide.

Why you should use automated sensory analysis?
Electronic Nose offers high performance and reliability for quality assurance:
- Fully automated operation
- Excellent sensitivity
- Fast analysis

The Most Versatile Tribology System Ever Designed
Bruker’s Universal Mechanical Tester platform was researched in the early in the year 2000 and has been the most versatile and widely used tribometer on the market. Now, newly designed from the ground up, the UMT TriboLab™ builds on that legacy of versatility with a unique modular concept that harnesses more functionality than ever before.
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Articles
Manufacturing a piston or an engine component often involves awkward geometric features, such as inner groves inside a bore or cavity.
Because they are part of a high tolerance system, the inner groove must still be gauged with a precise instrument. But noncontact sensors or pencil probes are impractical and space is limited.
The process of using NMR analyzer for molecular structure identification and verification can be applied to many real-world examples to enhance a student‘s learning experience. In these protocols, students are given the chance to apply NMR technology to evaluate samples many of them are probably very familiar with; coffee and milk.
For most NMR applications, higher external magnetic field strengths are preferred for better dispersion and sensitivity, but are usually outside the budgets of educational labs. The good news is the Fourier 80 can do the job with a little help from auxiliary agents and Bruker’s step-by-step protocols designed for students.